The proposal was laid out
in a letter, dated Thursday and obtained Friday by CNN's "Amanpour,"
addressed to Attorney General Eric Holder and written by Bruce Fein, a
Washington-based lawyer for Snowden's father, Lonnie G. Snowden.
It demands that the
former National Security Agency computer contractor who exposed details
about U.S. surveillance programs remain free prior to trial; not be
subject to a gag order; and be tried in a place of his choosing.
It further demands that, if any of those promises is broken, the prosecution would be dismissed.
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"With these written
representations and guarantee, Mr. Snowden is reasonably confident that
his son could be persuaded to surrender voluntarily to the jurisdiction
of the United States to face trial," Fein wrote.
The Justice Department has no immediate comment.
In comments Friday to NBC News' "Today," the elder Snowden said he had not spoken with his son since April.
"I love him, I would like
to have the opportunity to communicate with him. I don't want to put
him in peril, but I am concerned about those who surround him," he said.
Though the 30-year-old
man may have betrayed his government, "I don't believe he has betrayed
the people of the United States," he said.
He expressed concern
that his son might have been manipulated by WikiLeaks. "Their focus
isn't necessarily the Constitution of the United States," he said. "It's
simply to release as much information as possible."
A day after authorities
in Ecuador said they would not bow to U.S. pressure as they weigh
Snowden's request for asylum, State Department spokesman Patrick
Ventrell denied any "bullying" tactics had been used.
"The point is just that
we are making a consistent point to any government that might take him
as a final destination that this is somebody wanted on serious felony
charges and we would like him returned to the United States," Ventrell
told reporters Friday in response to a question from CNN's Jill
Dougherty.
He was referring to his warning Thursday that Ecuador's economic ties with the United States could be jeopardized.
"What would not be a
good thing is them granting Mr. Snowden asylum," Ventrell had said.
"That would have grave difficulties for a bilateral relationship."
Ventrell then cited trade agreements the United States has extended to Ecuador.
"They're unilateral
trade provisions that provide a benefit to certain Ecuadorian products,"
Ventrell said. "Whether they're renewed or not is a prerogative of the
U.S. Congress."
Asked about that remark,
Ventrell said Friday, "I wouldn't call it a threat. I'd say that, you
know, we are making the same points in public that we are making in
private -- that this is somebody accused of serious crimes that we want
returned."
The warning sparked a strong response on Thursday from Ecuador's president, Rafael Correa, at an event in Quevedo.
"It is outrageous to try
to delegitimize a state for receiving a petition of asylum," said the
left-leaning economist who is known for decrying what he and other Latin
American leaders have called U.S. imperialism.
And on Friday, the
Embassy of Ecuador announced that the country had suspended its support
for the Andean Trade Promotion and Drug Eradication Act, which provided
duty-free treatment for certain products.
"As we have stated
previously, any political or economic consequences of our decision
regarding the asylum request are outweighed by our legal and
humanitarian obligations," an embassy statement said.
Last year, Ecuador granted asylum to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who remains in the nation's embassy in Britain.
Ecuador's rationale
appeared to have won support from former U.S. President Jimmy Carter. If
another country wants to give haven to Snowden, "then that is their
right as a sovereign nation," he told CNN's Suzanne Malveaux. "If the
United States can acquire custody of him, I'm sure he will be brought to
trial, and that's the way the law should be implemented."
Snowden's acts may have some positive impact, Carter said.
"He's obviously violated
the laws of America, for which he's responsible, but I think the
invasion of human rights and American privacy has gone too far," he
said.
"I think that the
secrecy that has been surrounding this invasion of privacy has been
excessive, so I think that the bringing of it to the public notice has
probably been, in the long term, beneficial."
Asked to elaborate, he said, "I think the American people deserve to know what their Congress is doing."
Snowden has been at Moscow's international airport since Sunday, when he arrived from Hong Kong.
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